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[casi-analysis] casi-news digest, Vol 1 #116 - 1 msg



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This is an automated compilation of submissions to newsclippings@casi.org.uk

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Today's Topics:

   1. CPA RUSHES TO TAKE BILLIONS IN IRAQI OIL REVENUES (ppg)

--__--__--

Message: 1
From: "ppg" <ppg@DELETETHISnyc.rr.com>
To: <newsclippings@casi.org.uk>
Subject: CPA RUSHES TO TAKE BILLIONS IN IRAQI OIL REVENUES
Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2004 20:38:27 -0400

http://tinyurl.com/3c53g

http://bellaciao.org/en/article.php3?id_article=1406

Friday 18th June 2004 :

CPA RUSHES TO GIVE AWAY BILLIONS IN IRAQI OIL REVENUES

With international attention focused on the impending transfer of power in
Iraq, the Coalition Provisional Authority is committing billions of dollars
to ill-conceived projects just before it dissolves, according to a new
briefing by the ****Open Society Institute's Iraq Revenue Watch Project****.
The briefing, Iraqi Fire Sale: CPA Giving Away Oil Revenue Billions Before
Transition, says that the U.S.-controlled Program Review Board in charge of
managing Iraq's finances recently approved the expenditure of nearly $2
billion dollars in Iraqi funds for reconstruction projects.

"With so much money available for cash give-aways, and so little planning on
how the process will work, it will be all but impossible to avoid corruption
and waste" said Svetlana Tsalik, director of OSI's Revenue Watch.

The money will come out of the Development Fund for Iraq, the main
repository for Iraqi oil revenues. But a number of the expenditures the
Program Review Board approved will go toward sectors for which Congress has
already allocated American tax dollars. This includes $500 million earmarked
for Iraqi security forces, even though Congress allocated $3.2 billion for
the same purpose. Likewise, the Program Review Board approved $315 million
for the electricity sector despite a $5.5 billion U.S. appropriation for the
same sector. And $460 million, on top of the $1.7 billion allocated by
Congress, is set to go to Iraq's oil industry.

**** Although few would object to the need for funding in these areas, it is
unclear why these appropriations were not made when the 2004 Iraqi budget
was adopted and subsequently revised this past March. The briefing questions
why the CPA is rushing to commit Iraqi oil funds instead of waiting for the
interim government to make these decisions when it assumes power at the end
of the month.

***** The UN Security Council resolution passed on June 8 requires the new
government to satisfy all outstanding obligations against the Development
Fund for Iraq made before June 30, leaving the new interim Iraqi government
with no choice but to honor the Program Review Board's questionable
expenditures. Iraqi Fire Sale warns that without mechanisms in place to
ensure accountability, the $2 billion in Iraqi funds will be vulnerable to
mismanagement and corruption.

Read the full briefing:

http://www.iraqrevenuewatch.org/reports/061504.pdf

http://www.iraqrevenuewatch.org/reports/061504.shtml


by : Iraq Revenue Watch   [Soros]
Friday 18th June 2004





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